Taxonomical notes on Indolestes Fraser, 1922 (Lestidae, Zygoptera). 1. Indolestes gracilis expressior ssp. nov. from eastern Cambodia
Author
Kosterin, O. E.
Institute of Cytology & Genetics SB RAS, Acad. Lavrentyev Ave. 10, Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia; Novosibirsk State University, Pirogova Str. 2, Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia
kosterin@bionet.nsc.ru
text
IDF-Report
2015
2015-04-28
81
1
11
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.3358796
95f9938e-946f-495a-bd6c-71fa002305bc
3358796
Indolestes
gracilis
expressior
ssp
. nov.
Figure 4
a-h
Material
studied
Holotype
♂
,
Cambodia
,
Mondulkiri Province
, the
river upstream Buu Sraa Waterfall, the left bank at the bridge
,
12°33'55'' N
107°25'09'' E
,
502 m
a.s.l.,
9 VI 2014
; deposited in Naturalis Biodiversity Centre, Leiden, the Netherlands (
RMNH
)
.
Etymology
Expressions
a Latin
adjective
in gradus comparativus and genus masculinus, meaning ‘more expressed', referring to a more expressed differentiation of the apical part of the cercus than in other subspecies.
Male (
Figure 4
)
Head. Labium bluish in central part, yellowish at margins. Labrum, mandible bases, genae dull bluish (
Figure 4a, b
). Anteclypeus of the same colour with a small indistinct dark spot at centre, postclypeus mostly dark-bronze with anterior part dull bluish forming a central projection of this colour. Frons, vertex and occiput dark-bronze, there is a pair of greenish spots just below lateral ocelli and another one lateroposteriorly of the former. Antennae blackish-brown (
Figure 4b
).
Thorax. Prothorax dull bluish with dorsal suture slightly darker brown and a pair of two indistinct bronze dorso-lateral patches (
Figure 4c
). Posterior lobe slightly raised with smooth margins, light-brown, darker dorsally (
Figure 4a, c
). Mesostigmal plate broadly-triangular, with a transversal lens-shaped central hollow deepening to its lateral ends, and deep middorsal groove. Central hollow and adjacent anterior margin brown, the rest dark-bronze but with brownish lightenings at sides of middorsal groove (
Figure 4c
). Synthorax ground colour changes from olivaceus at mesepisternum to dull blue on sides (
Figure 4a
). There is a broad middorsal dark-bronze band but dorsal ridge narrowly brown.
There
are elongate black spots at top of humeral and the first lateral sutures and a slight trace of a brownish stripe below mesopleural suture, with a small brown spot with indistinct margins in its dorsal part (
Figure 4d
). Sclerites at wing bases blue. Coxae and trochanters bluish, rest legs brownish, with outer sides of femora, ventral ribs of tibia, tips of tarsi, spines and hooks blackish (
Figure 4a
).
Wings
hyaline, major veins dark brown, minor ones black. Discoidal cell very narrow, its dorsal side is ca 0.35 as long as ventral side in fw and ca half as long on hw postnodals 10 on fw, 9 on hw. Pterostigmata of folded fore and hind
wings
disposed exactly near each other. They are ca 2.2 as long as high, accompanied with two cells below, dark-brown, bordering longitudinal veins somewhat swollen and darkened (
Figure 4e
).
Abdomen. Ground colour dull blue at S1-S3 (
Figure 4a
) changing to brownish at S5- S8 (partly shown in
Figure 4f
) but
again
greyish blue at S9-S10 (
Figure
4g
, h
). Tergites 1-7 with solid dark-bronze to blackish dorsal
stripes
.That on S2 shaped as squid body with a tail directed anteriorly. Those on S2-S7 are constricted anteriorly, before tergite anterior margins, marked with black rings, and rather indistinctly expanding to tergite ventral margins posteriorly (
Figure 4a, f
). S8 dark with indistinct lateral brownish patches in its anterior half (
Figure 4f
). S9 blackish with a pair of indistinct greyish-blue spots at posterior margin, nearly fused to each other, occupying half of its length. S10 greyish blue above changing through reddish-brown to blackish below (
Figure 4h
).
Figure 4. Details of
Indolestes
gracilis
expressior
♂ ssp. nov.
-
a, head, thorax
and
abdominal segments
1-
2; b, head, dorsal view; c, prothorax and synthorax dorsum, dorsal view; d,
top
of synthorax, lateral view;
e,
pterostigmata; f, S6
-
S10 of abdomen; g, anal appendages, lateral view; h, the same, dorsal view. Not to scale.
Cerci about twice as long as S10. In dorsal view (
Figure 4h
), their outer outline (bearing sparse robust spines) smoothly curving towards each other to distinct apical portions occupying about 1/3 of the cercus projection to the central
axis
. Apical portions dropshaped, rounded proximally, bluntly pointed distally, directed caudally but very slightly diverging. Inner outline of cerci elaborate: narrowing at ca 1/5 of their length, then with a ventro-adaxial ledge ending with a long process, then slightly broadening again; cercus apical portion forms a prominent rounded backward ‘heel'. In lateral view (
Figure
4g
), cercus dorsal outline nearly straight at basal 2/3 then bends down. Cercus ventral outline narrowing at basal 1/4, ventro-adaxial ledge with a subbasal blunt spine (not seen in dorsal view) and apical process; cercus apical portion hoof- or pen-like, with a rounded base and attenuated apex, occupies 1/3 of cercus length. Cercus dorsal side greyish blue,apical portion blackish-brown,rest brown (
Figure
4g
,h
). Paraprocts light-brown, thrice as short as
cerci
, rounded in dorsal
view
, trapezoid in lateral
view
, their dorsolateral side deeply concave with semicircular ridges occupying the concavities (
Figure
4g
, h
).
Measurements [mm] - hw 18; abd (without apps) 29; total length (with apps) 38.
Female unknown
Differential diagnosis
and remarks
The shape of the cerci of the new subspecies (
Figure 4h
)
is
close to that of
I. gracilis
spp. (
Figure 1
b-e) and
I. peregrinus
(
Figure 2
). However, the apical portion of the cerci
is
curiously inflated basally in dorsal view, forming a prominent ‘heel' protruding medio-anteriorly. So the cerci resemble rather legs and feet of a man in the act of brass swimming than the arms and hands of a man in the act of
diving
, as in the mentioned species. None of so far described taxa of
Indolestes
displays this shape of the cercus apical part, modification of which in the new subspecies looks most pronounced as compared to the related taxa. In other subspecies of
I. gracilis
,
I. peregrinus
and
I.
cyaneus
, the inner outline of the cercus at the apical portion base in dorsal view just turns caudad without a concavity before the apical part to form the ‘heel'. Drawings of the appendages of
I. gracilis
spp and
I. peregrinus
from
Ris (1916)
, Fraser (1933) and Asahina (1976) are reproduced in
Figures 1
b-e + 2a-c.
Indolestes
cyaneus
has more robust cerci with a less attenuated and inflated apical part (
Figure 1a
) (
Fraser 1933
). The coloration of the cerci, with distinctly darker apical portion,
is
as in
I
.
peregrinus
(
Asahina 1976
), while in
I.
gracilis
gracilis
they are almost dark throughout (
Fraser 1933
;
Asahina 1976
). However this character may vary with age, individually and geographically. The paraprocts in
/.
gracilis expressior
ssp. nov. (
Figure 4h
) are bluntly rounded in dorsal view, as should be in
I
.
gracilis
.
The body coloration and pattern, with straight margins of the synthorax median black band and the solid abdominal black markings not divided into anterior/posterior or left/
right
parts,
is
similar to those in
I. gracilis
and contrasted to
I. peregrinus
(
Asahina 1976
). Moreover, reduction of the humeral spots is similar to the nominotypical subspecies
I.
g. gracilis
from Sri Lanka.
Lieftinck (1940)
pointed that in that subspecies, these spots are variable from complete absence to 3-4 isolated spots or even fused into irregular fascia (as in
I.
g. davenporti
and
I.
birmanus
).
The small spot below the mesopleural suture in the
holotype
of
I
. gracilis expressior
ssp. nov. (
Figure 4d
)
is
brown and diffuse at margins, as it often happens with a variable, environmentally induced melanisation in some damselflies, e.g. in northern populations of
Enallagma
cyathigerum Charpentier,
1840
in Eurasia (
Kosterin & Zaika
2010
).
Yokoi
& Souphanthong (
2014
: fig. 4) provided a drawing of the appendages of a male of «
lndolestes
sp. 3» (
Figure 5
) from Paksong, Bolaven Plateau, Champasak Province, southern Laos. Their shape
is
very similar to
I.
gracilis expressior
ssp. nov., so that specimen most probably represents the same subspecies. Unlike the here described
holotype
, the photo of the general habitus of this specimen shows a complete humeral
stripe
(Ibid.: pl. 1). However, the great variation of the humeral pattern is common in
Sympecmatinae
and observed in
I. gracilis gracilis
(
Lieftinck, 1940
)
, hence
is
expected in
Indolestes
gracilis expressior
as well, perhaps depending on environmental conditions.
Figure
5.
Male anal appendages, dorsal.
-
Indolestes
?gracilis
expressior
♂
ssp.
nov. after Yokoi
&
Southpanthong
(
2014:
fig.
4,
as
Indolestes
sp. 3).
Distribution
The subspecies
is
known from eastern Cambodia and (tentatively) southern Laos.
Habitat
The
holotype
was startled from a bush branch in a secondary growth at the left bank of the large river which form the well-known Buu Sraa Waterfall. There were also some shallow stagnant pond and pools nearby. This place was at
502 m
a.s.l. (as to Google Earth) and was surrounded by countryside but close to the evergreen forest in the river valley downstream of that place. The Laotian male presumably of this new subspecies was collected at
1310 m
a.s.l. (Yokoi & Souphanthong 2014).The nominotypical Sri Lankan subspecies inhabits mountains, with localities between
1800 and
2500
m a.s.l. (
Bedjanic et al. 2014: 76-77
).
Discussion
I. gracilis
sensu lato
ranges from Sri Lanka through western (Western Ghats) and southern (Tamil Nadu State) India (
Ris 1916
,
Fraser 1933
), while
I. peregrinus
ranges from S China to Korea and Japan (
Asahina 1976
;
Wilson 2009
). East Cambodia
is situated
far to the east from the range of the former and far to the south from the range of the latter. Hence
I. gracilis
expressior
subsp. nov seems to represent the hitherto unknown south-eastern, Indochinese subspecies of this species, characterised by a more elaborated shape of the cerci with a more modified apical part.
No
Indolestes
spp. have been reported for Vietnam (
Do & Dang 2006
). Yokoi & Souphanthong (2014) listed three not identified
Indolestes
spp. from Laos, with their
«
lndolestes
sp3» most probably representing
I. gracilis expressior
ssp. nov. Since subspecies is an entity of intraspecies variation, specifically geographical variation, it
is
undesirable to describe a subspecies by one or two specimens. However, I am quite
convinced
in existence of this Indochinese taxon because of the unique apical part of the cercus in an area so remote from other subspecies. Of course, further specimens are needed to reveal the variation of the new species and its range and to finally prove its distinctness. Quite likely, it may appear bona species. Note, however, that this was the first and only
Indolestes
specimen obtained on my five 2-3 week long expeditions to Cambodia in 2010-2014, that
is
they are very rare. To postpone the description until a consider-able collection accumulates from Cambodia would mean for a long time to operate in discussions of the fauna of Cambodia with an unnamed taxon, among so many others of Indochinese
Odonata
(e.g. Yokoi & Souphanthong 2014), that
is
inconvenient.